What's Your Nature?
Become a Nature Up North explorer to share your encounters with wild things and wild places in New York's North Country. Post your wildlife sightings, landscape shots, photos from your outings, and even your organization's events!
Just Our Nature Posts
Run, Dorothy—Emerald City is Falling
By Paul J. Hetzler on
Blog: Just Our NatureWatertown is poised to become an Emerald City, but that’s not good news. Jefferson and Lewis will soon be Emerald Counties, and St. Lawrence County began the process of change two years ago. Unfortunately, this kind of transformation does not involve happy endings.
When the emerald ash borer (EAB) kills an ash, something happens never before seen—the tree becomes brittle and hazardous very…
Plant a Tree, or Rent It?
By Paul J. Hetzler on
Blog: Just Our NaturePlanting a tree isn’t rocket science, which is good thing. If it were that complex, I’d wager we’d have a lot fewer trees lining our streets. It may not take a scientist to plant a tree correctly, but a lot of money is spent each year to buy and plant trees which may as well be leased, because they will only live a fraction of their expected lifespan.
When trees decline and die after 15, 20, or…
The First Shall Not Last
By Paul J. Hetzler on
Blog: Just Our NatureSeems like competitiveness may be part of human DNA, but it does not always pay to be first.
No prize awaits the fastest car that passes a radar patrol, or the first person to come down with the flu at the office. And for trees, the first ones to turn color in autumn are not envied by their peers. If trees experience envy, which no one knows. The first trees to show orange and red and drop their…
Hottest summer on record for the North Country
By Alexander K. Stewart on
Blog: Just Our NatureAre you younger than 96 years old? Did you spend your summer here in the North Country? If you answered yes to both, then you just experienced the hottest summer on record (1922-present)! Yes, the summer of 2018 was a hot one.
Now, this might depend on how you define hot; is it the maximum temperature reached? Probably not. Instead, the best metric of “hotness…
Become a citizen journalist!
By Erika Barthelmess on
Blog: Just Our NatureNature Up North is proud to be working with the Weave News, North Country Public Radio, and The Hill News to sponsor the first annual St. Lawrence Citizen Journalism Incubator (SLCJI).
The St. Lawrence Citizen Journalism Incubator is a new initiative designed to provide North Country students and residents with the opportunity to receive training and support for conducting independent,…
Summer Intern Farewell
By Emlyn Crocker on
Blog: Just Our Nature
Summer in the North Country is a special thing - we live in a beautiful place, and enjoy the company great people and warm (but usually not too warm!) weather. Plus, there is an abundance of good swimming holes, if you know where to look. Here at Nature Up North, summer is a chance for us to put extra energy into creating interesting workshops and events…
I have an ash tree! What now?
By Allison Pilcher on
Blog: Just Our NatureEmerald Ash Borer is an invasive beetle that has killed tens of millions of ash trees since its discovery in Michigan in 2002. EAB reached St. Lawrence County in 2017. If you have ash trees on your property, it is important to plan for EAB.
Read more about Emerald Ash Borer
Ash trees are frequently found along our streets and as shade trees in our yards. Besides aesthetic value, they clean our…
Finding Hope for Ash Tree Survival
By Emlyn Crocker on
Blog: Just Our NatureYou look out your window on a mid-summer day: the sun filters through the full, bright green leaves on the big ash tree in your yard, making patterns that dance across your floor. You hear birds sing too; a pair of robins is nesting again in one of the upper branches. It’s a pretty picture, until you learn that emerald ash borer larvae (Agrilus planipennis) are slowly destroying this tree,…
Emerald Ash Borer: Getting Your Community Ready
By Allison Pilcher on
Blog: Just Our NatureNew York State has over 900 million ash trees. They line our streets, they shade our parks, and they’re in our yards. What would happen if those 900 million ash trees, 7% of all the trees in the state, died in only a few years?
Dead and dying ash trees can collapse spontaneously and without provocation, causing hazard to people and structures nearby. Many consider widespread ash death inevitable…
Nature Up North 2019 Calendar Photo Contest
By Emlyn Crocker on
Blog: Just Our NatureCalling all North Country nature photographers!
Have you dusted off your camera yet this season? Well now's the time, because Nature Up North is once again hosting our annual calendar contest for nature photos that will be featured in our 2019 wall calendar.
At Nature Up North we hope to inspire exploration and appreciation of the North Country environment. One way we do this is…